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The force toward the centre of the circle is called the centripetal force. centrpetal acceleration.
Centripetal force is the resultant force acting towards the centre of orbit of an object undergoing uniform circular motion.
work done is zero because force is toward the centre and distance is tangent to the circle so cos90 is equal to zero.[abbasia]
That is called a centripetal force.
Yes you do. You need a force that always attracts the object toward the center of the circle. It's called a "centripetal force".
The force toward the centre of the circle is called the centripetal force. centrpetal acceleration.
The force which causes acceleration towards the centre of a circle is called Centripetal force but what causes it can vary.
It is an resultant force directed toward the center of the rotating object
Centripetal force is the resultant force acting towards the centre of orbit of an object undergoing uniform circular motion.
Centripetal force
work done is zero because force is toward the centre and distance is tangent to the circle so cos90 is equal to zero.[abbasia]
The Centripetal force keeps a object moving in a circle and its force and acceleration are directed toward the center of the circle
A force directed from the center of a circle toward part of the circumference of the circle is a radial force.
To find the resultant force you need to find both the x and y component of the resultant force. Once you have that, you can use the Pythagorean theorem to find the resultant force.
That is called a centripetal force.
Yes you do. You need a force that always attracts the object toward the center of the circle. It's called a "centripetal force".
Centripetal Force is the correct answer